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Bahamas Junkanoo Carnival shows off costumes/IDB proposes new developmental policies to boost growth in Caribbean

Bahamas Junkanoo Carnival shows off costumes

cfc8bec4905ffb1a55bd947224a02702eab07a21_468x311_Q754de2f93ba7e657a11973fac3685055c3637e55d4_468x311_Q75From Bahama islands info

NASSAU, Bahamas — Prime Minister, the Rt. Hon. Perry G. Christie and Vice President of Administration and External Affairs at Baha Mar, Mr. Robert Sands, view the Costume exhibition for the new Bahamas Junkanoo Carnival slated for May 2015. The Costume Expo was held at the Melia Nassau Beach Resort on Saturday, September 27. (BIS Photo/Peter L. Ramsay)

Prime Minister, the Rt. Hon. Perry G. Christie, speaks with members of the media during the official opening of the Costume Expo for the new Bahamas Junkanoo Carnival, which is scheduled for May 2015. Also pictured: Vice-President of Administration and External Affairs at Baha Mar, Mr. Robert Sands, left, and Minister of Youth, Sports and Culture, Hon. Dr. Daniel Johnson. (BIS Photo/Peter L. Ramsay)

For more on this story go to: http://www.bahamaislandsinfo.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=19148:bahamas-junkanoo-carnival-shows-off-costumes&catid=51:Music&Itemid=180

IDB proposes new developmental policies to boost growth in Caribbean

By Guyana Times

Taking into account Latin America’s long history of industrial policies that have often done more harm than good, a new study by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) outlines when and how governments can intervene in an economy to boost productivity, while minimising the risks of repeating past mistakes.

In the IDB’s flagship research publication Development in the Americas, researchers examined successful as well as failed industrial policies worldwide to come up with a pragmatic and forward-looking framework aimed at helping decision-makers find the right mix of productive development policies, taking into account the realities of each country. “Industrial policies have fallen into disrepute because they often involved political favouritism, wasted resources, rent-seeking and corruption,” said Santiago Levy, the Vice President of Knowledge and Sectors at the IDB. “However, we believe that provided appropriate institutions are in place, under certain circumstances well-crafted government interventions can help boost productivity, and we are providing a new conceptual framework for that purpose.”

While Latin America and the Caribbean Region has made considerable economic and social progress over the past decade, the Region still lags wealthier nations in productivity growth, which explains lower levels of income and well-being. Indeed, creating the conditions to foster productivity growth is one of the main development challenges facing policymakers in the Region today.

There is wide acceptance to the view that governments have an important role in helping the private sector become more competitive in a global economy. But with the Region’s history of costly failures – from the informatics industry in Brazil to the rice producers in Costa Rica – industrial policy came to be viewed as a public sector overreach.

The groundbreaking study – titled Rethinking Productive Development, Sound Policies and Institutions for Economic Transformation – helps policymakers determine under what conditions it is useful to intervene and, if so, what would be the best tools to do it. Governments need to ask themselves what market failures a new policy seeks to redress, what instruments could be used to resolve this failure and, importantly, what types of institutions are necessary to develop the policy with success. Given the unique circumstances of each economy, instead of seeking out and imitating best practices, decision-makers ought to choose policies that best match the economy’s institutional capacities.

The book looks at the best available data and lays out a methodology to address how Latin America and the Caribbean government leaders can rethink policies of productive development to emphasise integration with global value chains, generate innovation, improve human capital, foster entrepreneurship and promote internationalisation, with the public and private sectors working together. Some of the issues addressed in the study include: Why is the “best practices” approach to productive development policies flawed; why did Asian countries do better at industrial policies than Latin American ones; should governments help small and mid-sized firms?

“This book is not ideological,” said José Juan Ruiz, the IDB’s Chief Economist. “It is based on analysis and evidence. Increasingly, the question is not whether to do productive development policies but how to do them. Sound policies will require new roles for public agencies, and more active involvement of the state in conjunction with the private sector.”

For more on this story go to: http://www.guyanatimesgy.com/2014/09/23/idb-proposes-new-developmental-policies-to-boost-growth-in-caribbean/

 

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